At the height of the Cold War with his angry and defiant appearance before the House Un-American Activities Committee

At the height of the Cold War, with his angry and defiant appearance before the House Un-American Activities Committee, his passport was revoked His recordings were blacklisted. But he also forged an extraordinary path as an athlete, left-wing intellectual and film and stage performer in an era of open racism.The son of a runaway slave, he was a star college football player, despite being beaten by white members of his team, and graduated top of his class at an elite US university. "The thinking was that if serious, major, grass-roots education was not done around this great handle of the 100th birthday, in the next century he would be unknown."Robeson's signature tune was "Old Man River", the song he performed in Showboat (1936) and whose lyrics he changed from a Broadway show tune ("I'm tired of livin' and feared of dyin' ") to an angry protest anthem ("I must keep fighting, until I'm dying"). However, what is at stake now, say a small but determined band of Robeson scholars and admirers, is not just setting the record straight, but saving an extraordinary and complex black American figure from obscurity in his home country.Anniversary projects include a multitude of World Wide Web sites, aimed particularly at US schoolteachers and their pupils.

There was also an unsuccessful campaign for a commemorative stamp. "What he deserves is his rightful place in 20th-century American history," said Mark Rogovin, of the Paul Robeson 100th Birthday Committee in Chicago. In his rich baritone, Robeson sang four songs, and a Welsh choir sang two back. The recording - the quality of which is surprisingly good - will be released later this year in the US and Britain on a CD called Freedom Train. It is part of a concerted effort to rehabilitate and recover Robeson's memory in the US, where it still suffers from the silent treatment of McCarthyism. This year marks the 100th anniversary of Robeson's birth on 9 April 1898. The Proud Valley, a 1939 propaganda film which cast him improbably as a stoker helping them to reopen their pits, was a favourite of his for its sympathetic depiction of working-men's lives.His left-wing politics were acquired in Europe, where he sided with the loyalists in the Spanish Civil War and met figures such as Noel Coward and Jawaharlal Nehru while studying and working in London.

A recent Robeson conference in New York has kicked off a series of events, exhibitions, and concerts.Paul Robeson had a particular affinity with the Welsh miners. Amid the glamour of the Grammy awards last week, the US music industry quietly honoured the black singer, who died aged 77 in 1976, with a lifetime achievement award for his "outstanding artistry". IN 1957, the American actor and singer Paul Robeson, blacklisted in the United States for his Communist connections and barred from travel abroad, gave a concert for Welsh coal-miners and trades unionists - by telephone. In Panama City, where he is often to be seen at the blackjack table in the Cesar Park hotel casino, Mr Bucaram recently told a reporter he hoped to return to run again for president "If I'm crazy, I can't be put on trial," he said.. One photo last week showed him wading into a raging river to clutch an infant from her father.

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